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Community Resources

Vantage Sued in Washington Heights Over Tenant Harassment

By Bennett Baumer
November 17, 2009 | Posted in IndyBlog | Email this article

Attorneys at Manhattan Legal Services recently filed a lawsuit on behalf of five Washington Heights residents against their landlord for harassment. The suit alleges the landlord, Vantage Properties LLC, violated the Tenant Protection Act and alleges the owners harassed, threatened and intimidated tenants in an effort to dislodge them from their affordable rent regulated apartments.

“Vantage has demanded payment of charges that the tenants do not owe, commenced baseless lawsuits against some of the plaintiffs, and refused to make necessary repairs to leaky ceilings on the verge of collapse, damaged floors, cracks and holes in the walls, and windows that do not close,” Manhattan Legal Services staff attorney Lyda Tyburec said.

“Additionally, the tenants live with mold, rodents and roaches because of Vantage and 3489 Broadway LLC’s gross negligence and disregard for the lives, health and safety of the plaintiffs’ and other occupants of the premises.”

According to the city’s housing agency, there are 100 open housing code violations on the 80-unit building. During this decade’s housing boom, Vantage has gone on a shopping spree, spending $300 million for 48 buildings in Queens and purchased other buildings in northern Manhattan covering 9,500 mostly rent-regulated apartments according to the Real Deal.

In Queens, Legal Services New York City filed a similar suit in 2008 over the company’s aggressive business tactics. As part of the Queens case, Vantage has temporarily agreed not to bring any housing court proceedings against tenants. Landlords have an economic incentive to evict or get tenants to voluntarily vacate their rent-regulated apartments. Once a regulated apartment becomes vacant the landlord can add 1/40 of the costs of renovations to the rent and once the rent surpasses $2,000 a month, the landlord can legally deregulate the unit (a process called vacancy decontrol). Once the apartment is deregulated, the sky is the limit for the rent and the new tenants have little rental protections. Tenant groups have been pressuring the State Senate to enact legislation repealing vacancy decontrol.

The Manhattan suit seeks an injunction requiring defendants to correct their records, to cease charging plaintiffs with balances that they do not owe, to cease the wrongful charging of Section 8 and excessive security deposit, and to stop threatening to file non-payment actions against rent-regulated tenants who have paid their rent according to Manhattan Legal Services Director of Litigation Chaumtoli Huq.

While the Manhattan suit only covers five long-term and elderly tenants, Huq commented that her group wanted to highlight a population more susceptible to fraud.

“I can’t imagine [Vantage] will act any different from Queens,” Huq said.

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3 Responses to “Vantage Sued in Washington Heights Over Tenant Harassment”

Harasss, the extra "s" is for more harassment Says:

Vantage is probably the worst case of predatory equity in the city. They have teamed with large private equity firms to buy up thousands of apartments and then the harassment starts. The harassment is a key part of their business plan.

Adam Says:

This is not Washington Heights- this is Hamilton Heights, the northwest section of HARLEM. The southern border of Washington Heights is 155th St- this is below that border.

mike Says:

Vantage is definitely one of the more aggressive landlords in the game today. One thing all current tenants need to be aware of is the preferential rent and how it is being used in todays market. The practice involves Vantage or other RS landlords advertising their units as stabilized and offerfing a preferfential. Many potential new tenants are unaware that the preferential rent is only for the duration of the current lease and a subsequent renewal could charge anything up to the legal limit. Many applicants find this out on the day of the lease signing, while others find out at renewal.

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